96 " \ '- " ... ). '" ' ! ... "1 uJu ..... A 0- ,...., \: ';ì f"" 0/ ... ., l >', '" / MADE IN Pride is !!! you feel when you're wearing the British Walker nylon mesh pump. Write for the name of your nearest store. J. P. SMITH SHOE CO., Chicago 22, Illinois WHAT'S THE BEST HOTEL IN NEW YORK1 PARK SHERATON! , , , , {' ...^ ' ':::-" ,, - ,.""..........."'. yMJ(<-"-. , <..^"'--:' 'iI:o".... ...... y ". ................... '\;. ,,' ^ '^"^ , ,'" ""',"",^ / -# 'x.: "., " .,"" / : ' ' /' > ',t;*;' ;;!t 1<' ' '< ' r f'- I :.> /. / ' r--; V "f" " .:.::.;J ,. :K " '."Z\ ,, ' "A t < $i , "'. , ':t' ..,J /. " _ " ''''-r " 4\'_ , , ;:.< ; : ' . ; rl, : 1 , 2 : __ <11 :f:{;;::::,.. y, Ñ' 1 Y ....., .". " ^W :" ï -- :"'# . " ; , ;. " 'i. &' ,^ . '''''y "'^'"< )o...."HW.. ...vÑ "C:X - , ..... 4 ,^t.,: _ '- zt- 't -' I' 'YY 'i''' Treat yourself to one of New York's newest and largest hotels, handy to everything from mid-l\1anhattan's best location Relax in luxury in a king-sized room. . . eat fabulous food at moderate cost. . . enjoy television in every room (without extra charge) . . . use New York's finest swimming pool and health club. . . find sophisticated enter- tainment in the famous Mermaid Room. Yes, Sheraton gives you more. . . and the friendliest ,velcome in New York. U RATON Choose SHERATON in Boston U OTELS Anz,erica's fastest growing fanÛly of hotels - because they give you more Providence · New York · Philadelphia Baltimore · Pittsburgh · Detroit Cincinnati · Chicago · St. Louis Montreal · Toronto and other cities .-----------------------------------------------------__I API\. L 2, 1, 1 9 5 1 school? Kolya? No, Kolya was useless for that The morning Gusta died, the old man and all the younger chil- dren cried, but Kolya refused to weep. My father, who had heen summoned, reported that Kolya did not even sit with the familv when they gathered in the dining room to discuss the bleak future. He had set up his easel in the room where his mother lay dead upon the bed. He was painting a picture of her. When Mikaiel went into the bed- roon1 a little later and found his son using his dead wIfe as a subject, he be- came apoplectic with rage. There was a fearful quarrel. The shouts and curses brought the neighbors out on the land- Ings of the tenement stairs. Suddenly there was a wail from Kolya. Mikaiel had seized his easel and hurled it through the window . It fell five stories, down into the street, and the paintbox followed. Kolya left the flat and never returned-not even for his mother's funeral. He came to stay with us, carry- ing under hIs arm his broken easel and his paintbox. A I' that time, we were living in Brighton Beach, in a narrow stuc- coed house that my father's rich oldest sister, Anuta, had bought for hiln. We rented rooms in the SUlnmer to poor city workers who wanted to spend a few weeks at the beach \Ve were a five-cent subway ride from the city, and the trip took only a little more than an hour, so in warm weather the house was usually filled Fortunately, it was Jan- uary when Kolya arrived, and we had what my mother called, when she was showing it to a prospective tenant, "a lovely vacancy." In fact, we had five of them, for there were no roomers in the house. My mother was full of pity for the motherless Kolya and angry with Mikaiel. "It is not a nice time, when th mother is just dead, to throw a son out of the house," she declared. True, she thought Kolya was foolish to in- sist on painting ("Imagine. A grown- up person wants to paint pictures!"), but she believed that in time this childish obsession would pass and Kolya would become a serious man-a salesman, per- haps, or a schoolteacher. My father's reaction to Kolya's ar- rival was to expand with righteousness. He was angry with Mikaiel for being such a muzhik, and he was happy to take his deceased sister's son into his house. He looked forward to becoming an in- fluence on Kolya. He talked of steer- ing the boy's interests toward govern- ment work, saying that he had an old